|
Help With Book Reports Papers
Old Man And The Sea: Themes Of Santiago Against Nature, Figures Of Christ And Relationships Between Characters
... of nature he must conquer. Earlier in the story, the first
part of nature is himself, for which he must fight off his hunger. This is
a harsh part of the story. He manages though to get a few bites in the
form of flying fish and dolphin of which he would like to have salt on.
This part of the story tells of a cold and harsh sea, that is, one that has
value and mystery as well as death and danger. It has commercial value as
well as the population of life in it. It is dark and treacherous though,
and every day there is a challenge. A similar story tells about a tidal
pool with life called `Cannery Road'.
This ...
|
Heart Of Darkness 2
... us in and it knits us out. It has knitted time, space, pain, death, corruption, despair and all the illusions--and nothing matters. I'll admit however that to look at the remorseless process is sometimes amusing.” In the Heart of Darkness, three evident themes include death, corruption, and despair. During Marlow’s journey into the “heart of darkness,” death, corruption, and despair became the manifest themes of the novel. First of all, Marlow came face to face with death several times throughout his voyage. Marlow finds out about the death of Kurtz, the climax of the novel, when the ...
|
Invisible Man: Plot Summary
... be accepted to the 'college'.
He is accepted and goes through two of his years at the college uneventfully.
He is ejected from the school during his junior year when the trustee who ws in
his care while visiting the school fell ill and is taken to a local bar to get
some alchohol. He is given seven letter of what he suposes to be recomendation
to give to people in New York. He moves to Harlem and delivers the letters.
He finds out that these letters were not recomenation but rather advisments
against hiring him. The seventh reciever of a letter gives him a job in a
paint factory. He does not derform well there a ...
|
The Yellow Wallpaper: Women In Society
... However, in this story, the house is not her own and she does not want to be in it. She declares it is "haunted," and that "there is something queer about it." Although she acknowledges the beauty of the house and especially what surrounds it, she constantly goes back to her feeling that "there is something strange about the house." Her impression is like a premonition for the transformation that takes place in herself while she is there. In this way the house still is the cocoon for her transformation. It does not take the form of the traditional symbol of security for the domestic activities of a woman, but it ...
|
1984 Big Brother Is Watching Y
... When we receive an order, we intuitively react and follow the command. At first, we do not think, nor contemplate the effects that come as a result of our actions. In 1984, we get a sense of a greater authority in Big Brother. Although we never come to know if Big Brother actually exists, the power and authority that this idol holds over the people is unimaginable.
The people of Oceania are divided into two classes, the members of the Party and the proletariat. The Party members are like machines that do the jobs of the government. In this world, never has anyone thought any different of his or her place in soc ...
|
Social Criticism In Literature, As Found In George Orwell's Animal Farm And Charles Dickens' A Tale Of Two Cities.
... in literature in which Orwell satirized the events in Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution. He anthropomorphises the animals, and alludes each one to a counterpart in Russian history. A Tale of Two Cities also typifies this kind of literature. Besides the central theme of love, is another prevalent theme, that of a revolution gone bad. He shows us that, unfortunately, human nature causes us to be vengeful and, for some of us, overly ambitious. Both these books are similar in that both describe how, even with the best of intentions, our ambitions get the best of us. Both authors also demonstrate that violence and th ...
|
The Truth Is Out There, Do We
... cultured people, he knew nothing of the dark depths of the human heart. When confronted with those horrible realities, he was forced to learn the "black" truth about life and people. His mind couldn’t comprehend the truths he had to accept; it was totally contradicting to what he knew, and so he crumbled, selling his soul to sit among demons and devils. He was hollow inside, had no sense of moral or social responsibility, and the black truth he discovered ate away and destroyed him. He regressed to savage behaviors he had previously repressed and let the darkness fill the cold void within him. Because he knew ...
|
A Separate Peace: Changes
... the other boys at Devon. “‘Leper!’ I threw the ball past a few heads to him. Taken by surprise, Leper looked up at him with anguish, shrank away from the ball, and voiced his first thought, a typical one. ‘I don’t want it,’” (30). Leper had a passive attitude towards life. Although it sounds like Leper was self-conscious, he was not. He just did not care about what anyone thought of him or was saying about him as long as he was having a good time.
Gene, one of his friends, talks about how the snow began to take possession of everything at Devon like the war took possession everything in the worl ...
|
Ambition Vs. Reasoning In Macb
... would of course lead to his downfall. The decision to kill Duncan also signified the last serious attempt at moral contemplation on the part of Macbeth. Throughout the novel we see that the Macbeth's ambition completely subverted their reasoning abilities and eventually lead to their downfall.
Macbeth, whom initially was a very reasonable and moral man, could not hold off the lure of ambition. This idea is stated in the following passage: "One of the most significant reasons for the enduring critical interest in Macbeth's character is that he represents humankind's universal propensity to temptation and sin. Ma ...
|
Thesis Paper On The Crucible T
... lives by admitting to this horrible offense adultery and ends up losing the trial along with his life. He did have a chance to live but instead of signing away his name and his soul to keep his life, he wanted to die honorably with his friends not without a name, a soul, and with guilt. “John Proctors decision to die is reasonable and believable”. Reverend Parris, the Salem minister and Proctors immediate supervisor, which says “ there is either obedience or the church will burn like hell is burning.” “The church in theocratic Salem is identical with the state and the comm ...
|
Browse:
« prev
197
198
199
200
201
next »
|
|